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MIT neuroscientists find two distinct cell populations in the striatum are affected differently by Huntington’s disease. They believe neurodegeneration of one of these populations leads to motor impairments, while damage to the other population, located in a structure called the striosome, may account for the mood disorders that are often see in the early stages of the disease.

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,Ann Graybiel ,Myriam Heiman ,Richard Faull ,Jessicaj Pourian ,Manolis Kellis ,Robert Buxton ,Sergio Sebastian Pineda ,Ayano Matsushima ,Broad Institute ,Artificial Intelligence Laboratory ,Nature Communications ,Department Of Brain ,Mcgovern Institute For Brain Research ,Saks Kavanaugh Foundation ,National Institutes Of Health ,Nancy Lurie Marks Family Foundation ,Cognitive Sciences ,Picower Institute For ,Institute Professor ,Mcgovern Institute ,Simons Foundation ,University Of Auckland ,Govern Institute ,Brain Research ,Picower Institute ,National Institutes ,Huntingtons Disease ,Striatum ,Triosom ,Na Sequencing ,Eurodegeneration ,Dopamine ,

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